Friday, August 31, 2012

York Family’s Inspirational Story Becomes National News

Chris, Lauren, and Jason Durkin (photo courtesy Durkin family and ABC News)

 
By Pat Sommers
Staff Columnist

YORK –
Sharon and Michael Durkin felt as if they were living a bad dream in 2006 when son Jason, then 18, was diagnosed with a rare disorder that affects the blood and bone marrow.
That bad dream became a recurring nightmare for the York parents.
Doctors subsequently discovered that their younger son, Chris, was suffering from the same condition, myelodysplastic syndromes, or MDS. He was 15.
Then, in 2009, daughter Lauren, now a senior at York High School, received the same diagnosis.
The story of the York family’s courage in coping with the potentially life-threatening illness was spotlighted this week on ABC’s “Good Morning America” television program. Robin Roberts, an anchor for the popular morning show who successfully battled breast cancer five years ago, announced recently that she has MDS. The disorder, she said, was triggered by her cancer treatment.
In MDS, the blood marrow does not make enough normal blood cells for the body. Red blood cells, white blood cells and platelets may all be affected, and the course of the disease is different for each of the 10,000 to 15,000 Americans who are diagnosed with myelodysplastic syndromes annually.
Though MDS can affect people of any age, at least 80 percent of all cases occur in people over 60, making the case of the Durkin siblings more startling. The disorder is more common in men than women.
In reporting on Roberts’ diagnosis and the upcoming bone marrow transplant that will be part of her treatment for MDS, ABC noted the extreme rarity of the genetic form of the disorder for which Jason, Chris, and Lauren were treated.
According to Dr. Inga Hofmann of Dana-Farber/Children’s Hospital Cancer Center, the Boston facility where the Durkin children received treatment, only about 4 in 1 million children in the U.S. are diagnosed with MDS. Having more than one child in a family diagnosed with the disorder is exceedingly rare, she said.
Jason was diagnosed after his ice hockey coach noticed the boy seemed to be lagging in tryouts. ”Something just didn’t seem right,” Sharon Durkin told ABC. A trip to the family doctor and subsequent blood tests led to the discovery of MDS.
As doctors searched for a matching donor for an urgently needed bone marrow transplant for Jason, they tested his brother. Chris was a perfect donor match, but the tests indicated he also had MDS.
Both young men received successful bone marrow transplants in 2007and, as part of the treatment regimen, both were quarantined for a full year to protect their fragile immune systems from infection. Similarly, Roberts is expected to take a leave of several months from her post on the morning show.
Treatment immediately prior to the bone marrow transplants essentially strips the body of all its immunity, Michael Durkin explained. The donor bone marrow is then introduced into the body where it starts to strengthen. “It’s sort of like getting a whole new immune system,” he told The Weekly Sentinel.
Lauren Durkin, whose tests for MDS were negative during the two years of her brothers’ treatment and recovery, received a positive result in 2009. When efforts to find a transplant donor match came up empty, she received a blood cord transplant of stem cells. A high fever and infection at one point severely threatened the teen’s life, but she fought her way through and is ready to resume classes at York High, where she is a member of the varsity hockey team.
Durkin said there is really no way to explain how the family handled the fear and anguish they felt during the past six years. “We just took it one day at a time,” he said. “That’s all you can do.”
The three children were “very strong” through the entire ordeal, their father added.
Comforting to the Durkin family was the response of friends, neighbors and total strangers.
“The community of York was absolutely fabulous,” Durkin said, noting that drives to register area residents as potential bone marrow donors for the Durkin children and others in need attracted about 800 people.
Both Sharon and Michael Durkin are community minded. They have both been active in sports organizations for children, serving in administrative capacities and assisting in efforts to coach area teams.
Their hard work was rewarded in the many events hosted on their behalf during the family’s time of crisis. “Community members were tremendous in their response,” Michael Durkin reiterated.
All three Durkin children are “now stable,” according to their father. Jason, approaching his 24th birthday, is an honor graduate of the University of Maine and has launched a career. Chris, 21, is a college sophomore. Lauren, ready to begin her final year at York High, is eying a career as a pediatric oncology nurse.
They are all healthy, enthusiastic, and optimistic.
And they shared that exuberance this week with ABC’s Roberts, each offering a personal message of encouragement and good wishes as she begins her own fight with MDS.

Portsmouth Preps for September's First Friday Art Walk

New Hampshire Art Association & Robert Lincoln Levy Gallery

Story and photo by Bill Moore

PORTSMOUTH –
On the first Friday of every month, the art community from around the New
Hampshire and southern Maine shoreline gather in Portsmouth to attend a grand
viewing of new art at ten different galleries in the heart of the city. Known as the Art 'Round Town Gallery Walk, this month’s event is Friday, September 7, and runs between 5 and 8 p.m.
“We describe it as a self-guided walking tour of art in Portsmouth,” said Wendy Clement of Kennedy Gallery & Custom Framing. “It's a simultaneous open house. Each gallery is different, featuring their own specialty of art and offering different food and wine (and non-alcoholic beverages).”
The occasion brings art fans from all over, offering great art and artists, and free food and drink, all in sight of the great white North Church.
“It's a lot of fun,” said Clement.
To highlight a couple of places to check out, start with the New Hampshire Art Association, a huge statewide organization with a wealth of artists and photographers displaying their work. On First Friday, a new photo display will be going up.
Next door is the McLaughlin-Hills Gallery. Catherine McLaughlin-Hills is a practicing midwife at York Hospital. She volunteered to do work in the Dominican Republic, but needed to sharpen her Spanish skills. So, she wound up in Oaxaca, Mexico. There she discovered artists whose work you can see in her gallery. Her gallery is introducing something new to the Seacoast - beautiful functional art, the renowned and highly sought-after organic Colombian black clay cooking and serving vessels that are produced in
the village of La Chamba, whose origins can be traced back 700 years on the banks of the Magdalena River in Central Colombia.
If you like South American artwork, you should check out Nahcotta where the “Enormous Tiny Art Show” - the one and only archetypal exhibition of all-original small art - is in its sixth year of existence.
Jay Schadler Studio and Gallery has just been added to the First Friday tour, and
they have two interactive ipad stations and will be featuring new artwork from
the Seacoast and Boston. Plus, you can meet Schadler, himself, a two-time Emmy Award-winning photojournalist and artist while there.
The Three Graces will be featuring new works by Anne Buckwalter in September.
 “Anne's current body of work explores the translation of narrative. She uses characters and objects from nightmares, news stories, traditional folklore and fiction and spills them onto a blank page to construct a complex, new situation. Anne is particularly interested in masks, mutations, arctic temperatures, vessels, armies, amputations, uniforms, misgivings  and aftermaths,” according to a press release.
First Friday is the best time to catch the latest artwork and meet the artists, but if you can’t make it on Friday, September 7, there are plenty of other times to take it in.
“The shows are up for the rest of the month , so you can stop by and
see it anytime, if you miss the party,” Clement said.
Here's the list of galleries participating in the art walk. Because there is so much to see, starting at any of the galleries will work, although a natural place to begin is with the New Hampshire Art Association/Lincoln Levy Gallery on State Street, then moving to the west after stopping at the nearby McLaughlin-Hills Gallery.

- The Banks Gallery 32 Daniel Street 603-431-9799 www.thebanksgallery.com
- Discover Portsmouth Center 10 Middle Street 603-436-8420
www.portsmouthhistory.org/discover_portsmouth_center
- Kennedy Gallery & Custom Framing 41 Market Street 603-346-7007
www.kennedygalleryandframing.com
- McLaughlin-Hills Gallery 110 State Street 603-319-8306
www.mclaughlin-hillsgallery.com
- Nahcotta 110 Congress Street 603-433-1705 www.nahcotta.com
- Piscataqua Fine Arts 123 Market Street 603-436-7278 www.dongorvettgallery.com/
- New Hampshire Art Association/Robert Lincoln Levy Gallery 136 State Street
603-431-4230 www.nhartassociation.org
- Portsmouth Athenaeum/Randall Gallery 6-8 Market Square 603-431-2538
- Three Graces 105 Market Street 603-436-1988 www.threegracesgallery.com
- Jay Schadler Studio 82 Fleet Street 603.501.0416 www.jayschadler.com

Annual Antique & Classic Auto Show

Some of the antique cars on display at Dover Museum (courtesy photo)


DOVER –
The Woodman Institute Museum trustees and Dupont’s Auto Service Center will hold their annual Annual Antique & Classic Auto Show on the grounds of the Dover museum on Sunday, September 9, from 12 to 4 p.m. Many early vintage and classics from the 1940s, 1950s, and 1960s will be available for pictures. Bring your camera and chat with the car owners, see antique motorcycles, tour three historic museum exhibit buildings and see ninety-six years of collections. Regular admission will be charged. Museum members are free. The show includes the “Letters Home” Civil War exhibit and a special “Photography During the Civil War” display. Even Howdy Doody is expected to arrive in his 1955 Chevy pedal car. The Woodman Institute Museum is a natural science, local history and art museum since 1916 and is located at 182 Central Avenue in historic Dover, New Hampshire. Free parking on the street. Call 603-742-1038 or visit www.woodmaninstitutemuseum.org.